JOURNAL ARTICLE

Photocurrent and Electronic Activities of Oriented-His-Tagged Photosynthetic Light-Harvesting/Reaction Center Core Complexes Assembled onto a Gold Electrode

Abstract

A polyhistidine (His) tag was fused to the C- or N-terminus of the light-harvesting (LH1)-α chain of the photosynthetic antenna core complex (LH1-RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides to allow immobilization of the complex on a solid substrate with defined orientation. His-tagged LH1-RCs were adsorbed onto a gold electrode modified with Ni-NTA. The LH1-RC with the C-terminal His-tag (C-His LH1-RC) on the modified electrode produced a photovoltaic response upon illumination. Electron transfer is unidirectional within the RC and starts when the bacteriochlorophyll a dimer in the RC is activated by light absorbed by LH1. The LH1-RC with the N-terminal His-tag (N-His LH1-RC) produced very little or no photocurrent upon illumination at any wavelength. The conductivity of the His-tagged LH1-RC was measured with point-contact current imaging atomic force microscopy, indicating that 60% of the C-His LH1-RC are correctly oriented (N-His 63%). The oriented C-His LH1-RC or N-His LH1-RC showed semiconductive behavior, that is, had the opposite orientation. These results indicate that the His-tag successfully controlled the orientation of the RC on the solid substrate, and that the RC produced photocurrent depending upon the orientation on the electrode.

Keywords:
Photosynthetic reaction centre Photocurrent Rhodobacter sphaeroides Chemistry Electrode Electron transfer Substrate (aquarium) Electrochemistry Crystallography Materials science Optoelectronics Photosynthesis Photochemistry Physical chemistry Biochemistry

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70
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53
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0.92
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Citation History

Topics

Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
Porphyrin and Phthalocyanine Chemistry
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry

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